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DOTY-Mrs. George A. (nee, Anne #VVO Reaser), forty-three, of 212 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, in the Bloomsburg Hospital at 8:05 p. m. Monday, May 13. Complications caused death. Surviving are her husband, a daughter, two sons, her mother, a sister, and a brother. Funeral services will be held from the. Baker funeral home Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, with the Rev. J. E. Johnson officiating. Burial will be made in the Old Rosemont cemetery. Friends may call at the Baker funeral home this evening from seven to nine o'clock. Baker Funeral Home, Bloomsburg, Director. mm Funeral Thursday 57/,'a\l Funeral services for Mrs. George A Doty, of Bloomsburg, will be held Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock from the Baker funeral home, Bloomsburg. The Rev. J. E. Johnson, pastor of the Baptist Church, will officiate, with burial to be made in the Old Rosemont cemetery. 94 P.C. of Graduates in Business Course Placed 5/16/40 Bloomsburg State Teachers College I which has graduated 222 in its department of business education since it was made part of the college curriculum in 1930, has placed ninety-four per cent of its graduates either in educational work or in business, according o a recent survey made by Dean Harvey A. Andruss, acting president of the teachers college. . The department was organized in liwu land graduated its first class, six in number, in 1933. Since that time there ;has been a total of 222 graduates and I of this number 179 obtained teaching I positions and 30 went into business, i making a total of 209 places. This record of placement, Mr. Andruss states, indicates that there is a continuing demand for commercial teachers in Pennsylvania. Some of the graduates, as well, have been placed in high schools and colleges of New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts. Maryland, New York, New Jersey. North Carolina, Virginia and Florida. At the present time the freshmai. class at the college is taking the business education curriculum is limited to 120 and it is the policy of??the college to maintain th enrollment in the department of business education at approximately the present number, which is 300. Here is a table of the graduates and the percentage placed in position. These Were Scenes of Beauty as College Enthroned Its Queen of the May ???___. Flanked on either side by a quartet of attendants, Miss Rosemary Haus knecht, May of to Bloomburg State Teachers College, is shown just before the processional to the throne started in the May Day ex ecLatthe college yestefday afternoon. . The group includes, left to right Misses Northumberland; Vivian Frey, of Mifflinville; He^^ peck, and Mary Hanley, of Hazleton. (Morning Press Photo) ; Year No 1933 6 1934 31 1935 34 1936 16 1937 31 1938 49 1939 56 Totals 222 Bur-. 1 3 1 2 4 8 11 30 Teach S 28 33 14 26 40 33 179 100 100 100 100 97 2 04 ??? JfcW ??? ??? ???

DOTY-Mrs. George A. (nee, Anne #VVO Reaser), forty-three, of 212 West Third Street, Bloomsburg, in the Bloomsburg Hospital at 8:05 p. m. Monday, May 13. Complications caused death. Surviving are her husband, a daughter, two sons, her mother, a sister, and a brother. Funeral services will be held from the. Baker funeral home Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, with the Rev. J. E. Johnson officiating. Burial will be made in the Old Rosemont cemetery. Friends may call at the Baker funeral home this evening from seven to nine o'clock. Baker Funeral Home, Bloomsburg, Director. mm Funeral Thursday 57/,'a\l Funeral services for Mrs. George A Doty, of Bloomsburg, will be held Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock from the Baker funeral home, Bloomsburg. The Rev. J. E. Johnson, pastor of the Baptist Church, will officiate, with burial to be made in the Old Rosemont cemetery. 94 P.C. of Graduates in Business Course Placed 5/16/40 Bloomsburg State Teachers College I which has graduated 222 in its department of business education since it was made part of the college curriculum in 1930, has placed ninety-four per cent of its graduates either in educational work or in business, according o a recent survey made by Dean Harvey A. Andruss, acting president of the teachers college. . The department was organized in liwu land graduated its first class, six in number, in 1933. Since that time there ;has been a total of 222 graduates and I of this number 179 obtained teaching I positions and 30 went into business, i making a total of 209 places. This record of placement, Mr. Andruss states, indicates that there is a continuing demand for commercial teachers in Pennsylvania. Some of the graduates, as well, have been placed in high schools and colleges of New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts. Maryland, New York, New Jersey. North Carolina, Virginia and Florida. At the present time the freshmai. class at the college is taking the business education curriculum is limited to 120 and it is the policy of??the college to maintain th enrollment in the department of business education at approximately the present number, which is 300. Here is a table of the graduates and the percentage placed in position. These Were Scenes of Beauty as College Enthroned Its Queen of the May ???___. Flanked on either side by a quartet of attendants, Miss Rosemary Haus knecht, May of to Bloomburg State Teachers College, is shown just before the processional to the throne started in the May Day ex ecLatthe college yestefday afternoon. . The group includes, left to right Misses Northumberland; Vivian Frey, of Mifflinville; He^^ peck, and Mary Hanley, of Hazleton. (Morning Press Photo) ; Year No 1933 6 1934 31 1935 34 1936 16 1937 31 1938 49 1939 56 Totals 222 Bur-. 1 3 1 2 4 8 11 30 Teach S 28 33 14 26 40 33 179 100 100 100 100 97 2 04 ??? JfcW ??? ??? ???